Hawaii County operators cut prices a little – by $3 to $192 – which they have mostly resisted doing during this downturn. Occupancy improved slightly, from 56.3 percent last year to 60.6 percent this August. RevPAR rose $6 to $116.

Kauai operators, who also have generally resisted discounting, raised rates slightly, from $190 to $193, and saw their occupancy rate rise slightly, from 61.6 percent to 62.4 percent. RevPAR rose $3 to $120.

That gave a statewide August occupancy rate of 75.7 percent and a RevPAR of $137, an improvement of almost $14.

On Maui, gains were substantial in every price category but especially so in the midprice and economy categories. Economy rooms, charging $115 a night, zoomed from 47.4 percent occupancy to 66.1 percent.

Economy is relative in the survey conducted by Smith Travel Research for Hospitality Advisors. On Oahu, an economy hotel charges an average of $73 a night and $115 will almost get you an “upscale” room – those were going for $130 in August.

Economy rooms jumped in occupancy on Oahu, but not nearly as much as on Maui, from 73 percent to 81.8 percent. But there are many more economy rooms on Oahu, so relatively big percentage increases on Maui do not translate into very many room-nights sold.

Oahu has a category even cheaper than economy, budget, whose rooms went for an average $67 in August. Smith Travel does not consider that Maui has enough budget rooms to report.

“Waikiki in particular has had several sold-out periods during the summer,” said Joseph Toy, president of Hospitality Advisers. That is “something we haven’t seen in a long while.”

He added, “A lot of capacity remains in the market that will need to be absorbed before we can start to see real growth in room revenue. Still, the market is headed in the right direction.”